CHINA GEARS INTO ACTION TO ADDRESS CLIMATE CHANGE

Environmental Panorama
International
June of 2007

 

04 Jun 2007 - China has remarkably stepped forward in addressing climate change by releasing its first Climate Change National Action Plan on June 4, 2007. The plan is the first formal acknowledgement of China’s goal to reduce CO2 emissions through a cut of energy consumption by 20 per cent per unit of GDP (Gross Domestic Product) by 2010. This clarification of the country’s basic stand on the issue is expected to play a positive role and stimulate an agreement on greenhouse gases emission cuts in post-Kyoto Protocol days, WWF says.

“The Chinese government has set a responsible and positive example for other countries, both developing and developed, in the efforts to increase energy consumption efficiency and explore low-carbon development path despite several factors of pressures such as population and fast economic development,” said WWF International Director General James Leape.

Assigned by the State Council, the plan was jointly completed by relevant departments and several scores of experts mobilized by the National Development and Reform Commission over the past two years. Although the plan does not put forward new policies and objectives, WWF thinks that it will take effect similar to China’s 11th Fifth-year Plan in terms of official significance that will strengthen the practical execution capability of governments on provincial and county levels by guiding them to build new constitutional outfit and capacity towards climate change and integrate the issue into local sustainable development policy and planning. This is an applicable guideline developed on the basis of Chinese society’s political and economic framework.

According to WWF China Climate Change and Energy Programme director Chen Dongmei, the quick and effective transfer and spread of technologies that help combat climate change is crucial to determine the ultimate result of our global fight against the challenge. “We hope that innovative mechanism could be explored within the United Nation's Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) to encourage regional and global technological cooperation, which will turn the counteraction into a driver for growth,” she said.
Tan Rui, Communications Officer, WWF China

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WWF annual conference marks World Environment Day

05 Jun 2007 - Beijing, China/Gland, Switzerland – World leaders, corporate partners and conservationists join forces today in a renewed focus on solving some of the most urgent issues of our time — halting climate change and living within the natural resources of the planet.

As part of World Environment Day celebrations, more than 200 delegates to the WWF Annual Conference are attending a special forum sponsored by WWF and China’s State Forest Administration in the Great Hall of the People in Beijing. Former UN Secretary General Kofi Annan will give the opening address, where he is expected to challenge nations and citizens to change the way they think about and use energy to halt climate change and create a more fair and equitable society for all.

“The theme of our conference is Living Within One Planet, and never has the need to do so been greater,” said WWF International President Chief Emeka Anyaoku.

“If poor countries are to develop, rich countries maintain their prosperity, and emerging economies reach their full potential, then we must all embrace sustainable development. We simply cannot go on living beyond our natural means."

WWF’s Living Planet Report 2006, released last October, highlighted a rapid and continuing loss of biodiversity, showing an overall decline of about 30 per cent over a 33-year period. It also showed that humanity’s footprint – our impact upon the planet – tripled between 1961 and 2003. Climate changing emissions from fossil fuel use made up 48 per cent – almost half – of our footprint.

“If we are going to succeed in reducing our footprint, and reducing our loss of biodiversity, we must do more, and we must do it now," said WWF International Director General James Leape.

"We need to embark on ambitious new partnerships with governments, corporations, international institutions and other NGOs if we are going to get the world on a sustainable track.”
The Chinese government recognizes the place of conservation and has included the environment as a key part of its policy to build a "harmonious society". Also, in its new National Action Plan on Climate Change, China has for the first time linked its existing plan to cut energy use by 20 per cent to cutting carbon emissions to combat climate change.

“This is a good step forward, but there is still more to be done in China and around the world," Leape added. "The time has come for tough decisions, for bold action by governments and the private sector."
WWF regularly engages with both, working together to find solutions to problems that affect us all.

“Today we are announcing a collaboration with The Coca-Cola Company, which will focus on a new global initiative to conserve water resources," Leape said. "By pledging to replace the water it uses, Coca-Cola is stepping up to protect its future and the planet’s.”

WWF’s annual conference will also be addressed by high-level figures from the Chinese government as well as corporate leaders including: E. Neville Isdell, Chairman and CEO of The Coca-Cola Company; Dr Ursula Schaefer-Preuss, Vice-President of Knowledge Managements and Sustainable Development at the Asian Development Bank; Jorma Ollila, Chairman of Nokial; and Xu Xubo, CEO of China National Cereals, Oils and Foodstuffs Corporation.
Moira O’Brien-Malone, WWF International

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International (http://www.wwf.org)
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